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Homestead & Land

The 1-Acre Homestead Plan: Feeding a Family on a Single Acre

One acre is enough to feed a family most of what they eat if you lay it out right. Here's a full zone-by-zone plan for how I'd divide it.

J By Jordan Polasek · 13 min read · El Campo, TX
The 1-Acre Homestead Plan: Feeding a Family on a Single Acre illustration

An acre is 43,560 square feet — about the size of a football field without the end zones. It feels small when you picture a farm and enormous when you have to maintain it by hand. The trick is intensity and layout: putting the things you touch daily close to the house and the things you visit occasionally further out. This idea — zones by frequency of visit — comes from permaculture and it's the single most useful planning concept I know.

The zone system

1

Zone 0 — the house

Where you live. Everything radiates out from here.

2

Zone 1 — daily (closest)

Kitchen garden, herbs, salad greens, the things you harvest every day. Right outside the door.

3

Zone 2 — frequent

Main vegetable beds, compost, chicken coop, small fruit. You visit daily but not constantly.

4

Zone 3 — occasional

Orchard, larger crops, main forage. Weekly attention.

5

Zone 4 — rare

Pasture, woodlot, wild harvest. Occasional.

A sample 1-acre allocation

AreaSizePurpose
House + yard~6,000 ft²Living space, Zone 1 kitchen garden
Main vegetable garden~5,000 ft²Intensive raised beds & cloth pots
Orchard~6,000 ft²12–20 dwarf fruit & nut trees
Chicken/poultry~2,000 ft²Coop + run for 10–15 birds
Pasture/forage~15,000 ft²Small grazing, green manure, expansion
Pond/water~2,000 ft²Catchment, irrigation, optional fish
Paths, sheds, compost~7,500 ft²Infrastructure and movement

What an acre can realistically produce

With intensive beds, a family of four can grow the majority of their vegetables on 2,000–4,000 square feet. Add a dozen fruit trees and you've got fruit through much of the year. Fifteen hens give you more eggs than you can eat. The acre's limit isn't space — it's your time and your water. Plan for both before you plant.

Jordan’s tipDon't develop the whole acre in year one. Start with Zone 1 and the main garden. Get those producing and easy before you take on an orchard and animals. Every homestead that fails, fails from doing too much too fast.

Water is the real constraint

Before you fall in love with a layout, map your water. Where does rain run? Where could a catchment tank sit uphill of the garden so gravity does the work? I cover this in depth in the water-capture guide, but plan it into the layout from day one — retrofitting water is miserable.


Written by Jordan Polasek, founder of Texas Roots, from his greenhouse in El Campo, Texas. Free to share. If this helped, the best thanks is to grow something or pass it along.